xref: /netbsd-src/share/man/man9/man9.x86/tsc.9 (revision 1b9578b8c2c1f848eeb16dabbfd7d1f0d9fdefbd)
1.\" $NetBSD: tsc.9,v 1.3 2011/03/13 04:57:21 jruoho Exp $
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7.\" by Jukka Ruohonen.
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30.Dd March 13, 2011
31.Dt TSC 9 x86
32.Os
33.Sh NAME
34.Nm tsc
35.Nd Time Stamp Counter
36.Sh SYNOPSIS
37.In x86/x86/tsc.h
38.Ft void
39.Fn tsc_tc_init "void"
40.Ft void
41.Fn tsc_sync_ap "struct cpu_info *ci"
42.Ft void
43.Fn tsc_sync_bp "struct cpu_info *ci"
44.Ft void
45.Fn tsc_sync_drift "int64_t drift"
46.Sh DESCRIPTION
47The time stamp counter
48.Pq Tn TSC
49is a hardware counter found in all contemporary x86 processors.
50The counter is implemented as a 64-bit model-specific register
51.Pq Tn MSR
52that is incremented at every clock cycle.
53The
54.Tn RDTSC
55.Pq Dq read time stamp counter
56register has been present since the original Pentium.
57.Pp
58Already because of the access method,
59.Tn TSC
60has traditionally provided a low-overhead and high-resolution
61way to obtain
62.Tn CPU
63timing information.
64Recently, however, this reliability has been undermined by
65such factors as system sleep states,
66.Tn CPU
67.Dq hotplugging ,
68.Dq hibernation ,
69and
70.Tn CPU
71frequency scaling.
72.Pp
73These potential new sources of unreliability are easily understandable
74when one recalls that the counter measures cycles and not
75.Dq time .
76Comparing the cycle counts only makes sense when the clock frequency
77is stable; to convert the cycle counts to time units, a general equation
78would be:
79.Dq seconds = cycles / frequency in Hz .
80The use of
81.Tn TSC
82as a source of high-resolution timing can be thus discouraged.
83But the basic premise is still guaranteed:
84.Tn TSC
85is a monotonically increasing counter.
86.Sh FUNCTIONS
87.Bl -tag -width abcd
88.It Fn tsc_tc_init ""
89The
90.Fn tsc_tc_init
91function initializes the
92.Tn TSC
93as a
94.Xr timecounter 9 .
95The function is called early in the boot process when the processors attach.
96.It Fn tsc_sync_ap "ci"
97The
98.Fn tsc_sync_ap
99function synchronizes the counter for the boot processor
100.Pq Tn BP .
101The supplied
102.Fa ci
103must refer to the
104.Tn BP
105itself.
106The
107.Nm
108interface takes internally care of such issues as out-of-order execution,
109where instructions are not necessarily performed in the order of execution,
110possibly causing a misleading cycle count.
111.It Fn tsc_sync_bp "ci"
112The
113.Fn tsc_sync_bp
114function synchronize the counter for the application processor
115.Fa ci .
116Interrupts must be off at machine-level when the function is called.
117.Pp
118It is necessary to call both
119.Fn tsc_sync_ap
120and
121.Fn tsc_sync_bp
122during the boot, but additional synchronization
123may be required also during runtime.
124As an example, the
125.Tn TSC
126needs to be synchronized for all processors when the system resumes from an
127.Xr acpi 4
128sleep state.
129.It Fn tsc_sync_drift "drift"
130Finally, the
131.Fn tsc_sync_drift
132function records
133.Fa drift ,
134measured in clock cycles.
135This is called when the
136.Tn APs
137attach.
138.El
139.\"
140.\" Some references that are not worth adding to the actual page:
141.\"
142.\" http://lwn.net/Articles/209101/
143.\" http://lwn.net/Articles/388188/
144.\" http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/11/4/173
145.\" http://www.ccsl.carleton.ca/~jamuir/rdtscpm1.pdf
146.\"
147.Sh SEE ALSO
148.Xr gettimeofday 2 ,
149.Xr hpet 4 ,
150.Xr hz 9 ,
151.Xr timecounter 9
152